. "La Cleveland Arena \u00E9tait une ar\u00E8ne \u00E0 Cleveland dans l'Ohio. Elle a \u00E9t\u00E9 construite et financ\u00E9e par l'homme d'affaires local Albert C. Sutphin en 1937 en tant que site de jeu pour l'\u00E9quipe de la ligue am\u00E9ricaine de hockey des Barons de Cleveland. L'ar\u00E8ne avait 9 900 places assises dans les tribunes et plus de 12 500 pour des \u00E9v\u00E9nements tels que la boxe o\u00F9 des si\u00E8ges au sol \u00E9taient disponibles."@fr . . . "1972"^^ . "\uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uC544\uB808\uB098"@ko . . . "1970"^^ . . . . "Cleveland Rebels"@en . "9900"^^ . "Cleveland Arena"@en . . . . . "1500000.0"^^ . . . . . . . "752144"^^ . "Richfield Coliseum"@en . . . . . "Cleveland Crusaders"@en . . . . "Cleveland Arena"@en . . . . . . . "1111639109"^^ . "11000"^^ . "Cleveland Barons"@en . "41.50388888888889 -81.66111111111111" . . . . . . . . . "POINT(-81.661109924316 41.503887176514)"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . "1500000.0"^^ . "La Cleveland Arena \u00E9tait une ar\u00E8ne \u00E0 Cleveland dans l'Ohio. Elle a \u00E9t\u00E9 construite et financ\u00E9e par l'homme d'affaires local Albert C. Sutphin en 1937 en tant que site de jeu pour l'\u00E9quipe de la ligue am\u00E9ricaine de hockey des Barons de Cleveland. L'ar\u00E8ne avait 9 900 places assises dans les tribunes et plus de 12 500 pour des \u00E9v\u00E9nements tels que la boxe o\u00F9 des si\u00E8ges au sol \u00E9taient disponibles."@fr . "first arena"@en . . . "-81.66110992431641"^^ . . . . . . . "3717"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "United States"@en . . . . . . . "Cleveland Arena was an arena in Cleveland, Ohio. It was built and privately financed by local businessman Albert C. Sutphin during the height of the Great Depression in 1937 as a playing site for Sutphin's AHL team, the Cleveland Barons. The arena was at 3717 Euclid Avenue, and seated over 10,000 in the stands and over 12,500 for events such as boxing, where floor seating was available."@en . . . . . . . . "\uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uC544\uB808\uB098(Cleveland Arena)\uB294 \uBBF8\uAD6D \uC624\uD558\uC774\uC624\uC8FC \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC\uC5D0 \uC704\uCE58\uD55C \uC2E4\uB0B4 \uACBD\uAE30\uC7A5\uC774\uB2E4. \uACFC\uAC70 BAA/NBA \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uB808\uBC8C\uC2A4\uC640 NBA \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uCE90\uBC8C\uB9AC\uC5B4\uC2A4 \uADF8\uB9AC\uACE0 AHL \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uBC30\uB7F0\uC2A4\uC640 NBL \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uD654\uC774\uD2B8 \uD640\uC2A4, WHA \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uD06C\uB8E8\uC138\uC774\uB354\uC2A4\uC758 \uD648\uACBD\uAE30\uC7A5\uC73C\uB85C \uC0AC\uC6A9\uD588\uB2E4."@ko . . . "41.50388717651367"^^ . "Cleveland Arena"@fr . "Cleveland Arena"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Cleveland Crusaders"@en . . . . "Home of the"@en . . . . . "Cleveland, Ohio, 44115"@en . . . . . . "Cleveland White Horses"@en . . "6500"^^ . . "\uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uC544\uB808\uB098(Cleveland Arena)\uB294 \uBBF8\uAD6D \uC624\uD558\uC774\uC624\uC8FC \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC\uC5D0 \uC704\uCE58\uD55C \uC2E4\uB0B4 \uACBD\uAE30\uC7A5\uC774\uB2E4. \uACFC\uAC70 BAA/NBA \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uB808\uBC8C\uC2A4\uC640 NBA \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uCE90\uBC8C\uB9AC\uC5B4\uC2A4 \uADF8\uB9AC\uACE0 AHL \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uBC30\uB7F0\uC2A4\uC640 NBL \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uD654\uC774\uD2B8 \uD640\uC2A4, WHA \uD074\uB9AC\uBE14\uB79C\uB4DC \uD06C\uB8E8\uC138\uC774\uB354\uC2A4\uC758 \uD648\uACBD\uAE30\uC7A5\uC73C\uB85C \uC0AC\uC6A9\uD588\uB2E4."@ko . . . . "9900"^^ . . . . . . "11000"^^ . . . . . "Cleveland Arena was an arena in Cleveland, Ohio. It was built and privately financed by local businessman Albert C. Sutphin during the height of the Great Depression in 1937 as a playing site for Sutphin's AHL team, the Cleveland Barons. The arena was at 3717 Euclid Avenue, and seated over 10,000 in the stands and over 12,500 for events such as boxing, where floor seating was available. In addition to the Barons, the arena was home to the Cleveland Rebels of the Basketball Association of America, also owned by Sutphin, for the 1946\u201347 season, and hosted several games for the Cincinnati Royals of the National Basketball Association (NBA), who played more than 35 of their home games there from 1966\u20131970. The arena and the Barons were purchased by Nick Mileti in 1968. In 1970, the expansion Cleveland Cavaliers of the NBA moved into the arena and played there for their first four seasons, from 1970\u20131974. The Cleveland Crusaders of the new World Hockey Association began play in 1972, hosting games there until 1974. Cleveland Arena was also a regular concert and boxing venue and six day bicycle races were held there between 1939 and 1958, moved there from Public Hall. On March 21, 1952, it was the site of the Moondog Coronation Ball, considered the first rock and roll concert, organized by Alan Freed. The concert was shut down after the first song by fire authorities due to overcrowding. It was estimated 20,000 people were in the arena or trying to enter it, when the capacity was roughly half that. The arena also had a medical facility, Arena Clinic, run by Ivan Lust. It was run primarily to provide medical care for visiting athletic teams and other entertainment, but also served as a walk-in clinic for the community. Its sign can be seen in photographs of the clinic. While the arena was a showpiece when it opened, by the 1970s it had become decrepit. It also lacked adequate parking. It closed in 1974, replaced by Richfield Coliseum; it was demolished in 1977. The headquarters of the Cleveland Chapter of the American Red Cross now occupies the site. It was the last major sporting facility to open within Cleveland's borders until Jacobs Field, now Progressive Field, opened for the Cleveland Guardians in 1994."@en . . . . "Cincinnati Royals"@en . . . .